TY - JOUR
T1 - Sleep neuroimaging
T2 - Review and future directions
AU - Pereira, Mariana
AU - Chen, Xinyuan
AU - Paltarzhytskaya, Anastasiya
AU - Pacheсo, Yibran
AU - Muller, Nils
AU - Bovy, Leonore
AU - Lei, Xu
AU - Chen, Wei
AU - Ren, Haoran
AU - Song, Chen
AU - Lewis, Laura D.
AU - Dang-Vu, Thien Thanh
AU - Czisch, Michael
AU - Picchioni, Dante
AU - Duyn, Jeff
AU - Peigneux, Philippe
AU - Tagliazucchi, Enzo
AU - Dresler, Martin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Journal of Sleep Research published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Sleep Research Society.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Sleep research has evolved considerably since the first sleep electroencephalography recordings in the 1930s and the discovery of well-distinguishable sleep stages in the 1950s. While electrophysiological recordings have been used to describe the sleeping brain in much detail, since the 1990s neuroimaging techniques have been applied to uncover the brain organization and functional connectivity of human sleep with greater spatial resolution. The combination of electroencephalography with different neuroimaging modalities such as positron emission tomography, structural magnetic resonance imaging and functional magnetic resonance imaging imposes several challenges for sleep studies, for instance, the need to combine polysomnographic recordings to assess sleep stages accurately, difficulties maintaining and consolidating sleep in an unfamiliar and restricted environment, scanner-induced distortions with physiological artefacts that may contaminate polysomnography recordings, and the necessity to account for all physiological changes throughout the sleep cycles to ensure better data interpretability. Here, we review the field of sleep neuroimaging in healthy non-sleep-deprived populations, from early findings to more recent developments. Additionally, we discuss the challenges of applying concurrent electroencephalography and imaging techniques to sleep, which consequently have impacted the sample size and generalizability of studies, and possible future directions for the field.
AB - Sleep research has evolved considerably since the first sleep electroencephalography recordings in the 1930s and the discovery of well-distinguishable sleep stages in the 1950s. While electrophysiological recordings have been used to describe the sleeping brain in much detail, since the 1990s neuroimaging techniques have been applied to uncover the brain organization and functional connectivity of human sleep with greater spatial resolution. The combination of electroencephalography with different neuroimaging modalities such as positron emission tomography, structural magnetic resonance imaging and functional magnetic resonance imaging imposes several challenges for sleep studies, for instance, the need to combine polysomnographic recordings to assess sleep stages accurately, difficulties maintaining and consolidating sleep in an unfamiliar and restricted environment, scanner-induced distortions with physiological artefacts that may contaminate polysomnography recordings, and the necessity to account for all physiological changes throughout the sleep cycles to ensure better data interpretability. Here, we review the field of sleep neuroimaging in healthy non-sleep-deprived populations, from early findings to more recent developments. Additionally, we discuss the challenges of applying concurrent electroencephalography and imaging techniques to sleep, which consequently have impacted the sample size and generalizability of studies, and possible future directions for the field.
KW - functional connectivity
KW - functional magnetic resonance imaging
KW - neuroimaging
KW - positron emission tomography
KW - regional cerebral blood flow
KW - sleep
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85217687741&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/jsr.14462
DO - 10.1111/jsr.14462
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85217687741
SN - 0962-1105
JO - Journal of Sleep Research
JF - Journal of Sleep Research
ER -